Photographic postcard of a brick house in Thetford, England, 1916. Includes a message from Edith A. Long to Mrs. Hartney in London, England.Inscription: "From Edith A. Long, home in Thitford [Thetford] Eng. where we stayed with, June 1916."
Photograph of Major Harold E. Hartney, Fort Worth, Texas, circa 1917.Inscription: "Maj. Hartney."Inscription on verso: "Irene, [illegible] taken at Fort Worth, Texas, 1917."
Photographic group portrait of servicemen at Camp Taliaferro, Texas, Jan. 23, 1918. The men, including Harold E. Hartney, are identified by last name in an inscription on the accompanying envelope. Also included is a newspaper clipping attached to…
Newspaper clipping, "Maj. Harold Hartney ranks third among American Air Force," from the Saskatoon Star, October 9, 1918. Reports on Hartney's military service and status as a fighter ace.
Photomechanical print of Harold E. Hartney with his Fokker D.VII aircraft, Rock Island, Illinois, 1919. The image was taken on Hartney's return journey for the Transcontinental Race.
Inscription on photo: "Lt. Col. Hartney on his return stop at Rock…
Letter to Mrs. Harold Hartney from H. H. Taylor, "Country Life" editor, January 20, 1919. Requests a photograph of Major Hartney for their publication listing all Americans awarded medals for their service in the war. One typed page on Doubleday,…
Citation certificate issued to Major Harold E. Hartney by the U.S. Army, April 19, 1919. Commends Hartney for his service as commander of the 1st Pursuit Group during World War I.
Photographic group portrait of Larsen air mail crews with a Junkers-Larsen JL-6 aircraft, circa 1920s. The people, including Harold E. Hartney, are numbered and identified in the caption. Hartney's middle initial is misprinted as "B" instead of…
Newspaper clipping, "Wreckage of Col. Hartney's plane," from an unidentified publication, circa 1920s. Reports on Hartney's crash in a Thomas-Morse aircraft. Includes a photograph of the wrecked aircraft.
Photographic reproduction of an illustration by Levon Fairchild West, depicting a pilot seated in an open-cockpit aircraft, circa 1920s-1930s. The pilot is presumably Harold E. Hartney.